BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field Of The Invention
[0001] This invention relates to cellular telephone systems and, more particularly, to processes
for designing and improving the performance of cellular telephone systems.
History Of The Prior Art
[0002] Presently available commercial mobile communication systems typically include a plurality
of fixed base stations (cells) each of which transmits signals to and receives signals
from mobile units within its communication area. Each base station is assigned a plurality
of channels over which it can communicate with mobile units. A mobile unit within
range of the base station communicates with the external world through the base station
using these channels. Typically, the channels used by a base station are separated
from one another sufficiently that signals on any channel do not interfere with signals
on another channel used by that base station. To accomplish this, an operator typically
allots to a base station a group of channels which are each widely separated from
the next. So long as a mobile unit is within the area in which the signal from a base
station is strong enough and is communicating with only that base station, there is
no interference with the communication.
[0003] In order to allow mobile units to transmit and receive telephone communications as
the units travel over a wide geographic area, each cell is normally physically positioned
so that its area of coverage is adjacent to and overlaps the areas of coverage of
a number of other cells. When a mobile unit moves from an area covered by one base
station to that covered by another, communication with the mobile unit is transferred
(handed off) from one base station to another in an area where the coverage from different
cells overlaps. Because of this overlapping coverage, the channels allotted to the
cells are carefully selected so that adjoining cells do not transmit or receive on
the same channels. The channels used by adjoining base stations are also theoretically
separated from the channels of each adjoining base station sufficiently that signals
from any base station do not interfere with signals from another adjoining base station.
This separation is typically accomplished by assigning a group of widely separated
non-interfering channels to some central cell and then assigning other groups of widely
separated non-interfering channels to the cells surrounding that central cell using
a pattern which does not reuse the same channels for the cells surrounding the central
cell. The pattern of channel assignments continues similarly in the other cells adjoining
the first group of cells. The pattern is often called a channel reuse pattern.
[0004] So long as a mobile unit is within the area in which the signal from a base station
is strong enough and is communicating with only that base station, there is no interference
with the communications. However, when a mobile unit moves from an area covered by
one base station to that covered by another base station, the communication must be
transferred from one base station to the other in an area. This requires cell coverage
to overlap. Because of this overlapping coverage, the channels allotted to the cells
are carefully selected so that adjoining cells do not transmit or receive on the same
channels.
[0005] There are a number of different types of mobile communications systems. Channels
are defined in different manners in each of the different systems. In the most prevalent
American Mobile Phone System (AMPS) system, channels are defined by frequency. A frequency
band of 25 MHz providing approximately four hundred different adjoining FM frequency
channels is allotted by the federal government to each cellular operator. In a typical
AMPS system, each channel uses a fixed FM frequency band width of 30 KHz. for downlink
transmission from a base station to a mobile unit and another fixed FM frequency band
width of 30 KHz. for uplink transmission from a mobile unit to a cell. Typically,
the frequencies assigned to the downlink transmissions for an entire cellular system
immediately adjoin one another and are widely separated from the frequencies assigned
to the uplink transmissions which also immediately adjoin one another. In this specification,
even though widely separated, the pair of frequencies used for both downlink and uplink
transmission are generally intended when reference is made to an AMPS channel unless
the context indicates otherwise.
[0006] Since channels are defined by frequency in an AMPS system, the channels used by any
single base station are separated from one another in frequency sufficiently to eliminate
interference between those channels. An operator typically allots a base station a
set of channels with frequencies which are each separated from the next by some large
number (e.g., twenty-one) channels carrying intermediate frequencies. Thus, in a system
with twenty-one channel separation, one base station might use channels 1, 22, 43,
64, 85, and so on up to a total of between five and one hundred individual channels.
[0007] When a mobile unit moves from an area covered by one base station to that covered
by another base station in an AMPS system, the communication must be transferred from
one base station to the other in an area in which cell coverage overlaps. Because
of this overlapping coverage, the channels allotted to the cells are carefully selected
so that adjoining cells do not transmit or receive on the same frequencies. This is
typically accomplished by assigning channels to a central cell which are widely separated
in frequency in the manner described above, and then assigning channels to the cells
surrounding that central cell using a pattern which increases each channel number
by one for each sequential cell surrounding the central cell. Thus, if cells are arranged
in a honeycomb pattern in which six cells surround a central cell using the above-described
channels, a first cell adjacent to the central cell may have channels 2, 23, 44, 65,
86, and so on while a second cell adjoining the central cell may have channels 3,
24, 45, 66, 87, and so on. The pattern of channel assignments continues similarly
in the other cells adjoining the central cell.
[0008] In some AMPS systems, especially those with cells in urban areas carrying heavy traffic,
each cell may be further divided into two or three sectors each of which may include
channels having the above-described frequency allotment of channels. The antennas
of each sector are typically arranged to provide 180 or 120 degree coverage. When
cells are discussed herein, sectors are normally meant as well unless the context
indicates otherwise.
[0009] Another type of mobile system called Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) uses digital
signals to transmit data. All of the base stations of a CDMA system use the same "spread
spectrum" frequency band of 1.25 megacycles to transmit the digital signals. The transmissions
are combined with redundant channel coding information to allow error correction.
The encoded signals are then multiplied by one of sixty-four Walsh codes which establish
individual channels and increase the bandwidth to 1.25 megacycles. Because of the
redundancy of the encoded signals, a receiver may decode a signal from the plethora
of coded channels carrying data on the broad frequency band. Since the Walsh codes
establish a number of individual channels and the pseudo-noise code assigned to each
base station differs from those of other surrounding base stations, adjacent and remote
cells may reuse the same frequency bands.
[0010] In another common type of mobile system called Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA),
frequencies are assigned to the entire system in groups much like they are assigned
in an AMPS system. However, within any frequency, each base station sends and receives
in bursts during some number of different intervals or time slots. These time intervals
within frequency bands then effectively constitute the individual channels. By assuring
that the group of frequencies assigned to any individual base station differ from
one another and from the frequencies assigned to base stations surrounding each individual
base station, a channel reuse pattern is established which allows substantially greater
use of the frequency spectrum because of the time division process.
[0011] In theory, these forms of cell arrangement and channel assignments allows channel
reuse patterns to be repeated at distances separated sufficiently to negate interference
between mobile units on the same and adjacent channels.
[0012] Unfortunately, interference does occur for a number reasons. Antenna patterns, power
levels, scattering, and wave diffraction differ from cell to cell. Buildings, various
other structures, hills, mountains, foliage, and other physical objects cause signal
strength to vary over the region covered by a cell. Consequently, the boundaries at
which the signal strength of a channel falls below a level sufficient to support communications
with a mobile unit vary widely within a cell and from cell to cell. For this reason,
cells adjacent one another do not, in fact, typically form the precise geometric boundaries
suggested above. Since cell boundaries must overlap to provide complete coverage of
an area and allow handoff and because the boundaries of cells are imprecisely defined,
signals will often interfere with one another even though they are generated by cells
which are at distances theoretically sufficient to eliminate interference. This is
especially true when a sectored cell pattern is used because the cells are much closer
to one another than in a simple cell pattern.
[0013] A first signal on a channel from a remote cell interferes with a second (usually)
stronger signal carrying a mobile transmission on the same channel within the coverage
area of a cell when the drop in strength of the first signal from the second signal
is less than some threshold level (typically measured in decibels). A signal from
another cell on a channel at a frequency adjacent the frequency of a channel carrying
a mobile transmission interferes when the drop in strength of the interfering signal
from the serving signal is less than some second threshold level. The values are determined
by the particular type of mobile system involved. For example, in an AMPS system,
a signal on the same channel (co-channel) from a remote base station interferes with
a desired carrier signal if the interference level is not 18 dB lower than the desired
carrier; and a signal on an adjacent channel from another base station interferes
with a desired carrier signal if the interference level is not 6 dB lower than the
desired carrier. For a CDMA system, an interfering signal must be more than 14 dB
stronger than the carrier to obscure a carrier signal because the codes establishing
the channels establish heavily redundant signals from which patterns may be extracted
even though the interfering signal is stronger.
[0014] In order to determine whether interference exists, a mobile system operator typically
relies on customer complaints. When customers register a sufficient number of complaints
regarding communication at particular points in a system, an operator will usually
conduct a relatively expensive field test of the suspected portion of the system to
measure carrier signals and interference received. During the test, the portion of
the system in which the tests are conducted is essentially disabled. Because of the
expense and inconvenience, the tests are typically limited only to the suspected area.
Because such tests are limited to determining the interference at those points at
which a system operator expects to find interference, the efficacy of these tests
is very suspect.
[0015] The tests provide data from which the points at which channels from different cells
actually interfere with one another may be determined. If the level of interference
is sufficiently large, the operator may change the channel group assigned to the particular
area. That is, the frequency group assigned to a cell (or cells) may be changed in
its entirety to another frequency group in which channels which would interfere with
channels carried by other cells do not exist. It is also possible to eliminate some
interference by changing cell characteristics (such as antenna tilt or power used
in particular cells) without changing the channels used. Once channels have been assigned
to cells which provide acceptable coverage and detected interference has been eliminated,
the system is fixed and operated until other complaints arise.
[0016] A major problem with the process is that it does not provide a complete understanding
of interference which actually exists in a system since typically only those positions
at which extensive interference has been reported are tested for actual interference.
The process does not take into consideration all of the possible signals which might
be propagating into the affected area to interfere with the carrier nor does it take
into consideration the effects which a change in channel assignments may have in other
areas of the system. Often (and possibly usually) this method of curing interference
merely exports the interference to another portion of the system where it is only
discovered when a sufficient number of complaints arise to warrant a field test of
the newly isolated area of interference.
[0017] Moreover, this method of placing cells, assigning frequencies, and eliminating interference
is quite slow and labor intensive. Testing a medium sized system may require as much
as 400 man hours. The process greatly increases the costs of creating and maintaining
mobile systems without guaranteeing that interference will be eliminated. Because
of the emerging nature of the market for cellular telephones, system changes which
cause interference such as traffic growth are taking place constantly and at an accelerating
rate. Complicating the general problem of interference in an existing system is the
fact that cellular system operators are presently installing new CDMA and TDMA systems
because they allow a greater number of mobile units to utilize a system and because
these digital system provides a better quality of service when they are functioning
properly. Often the installation of these new systems is taking place where AMPS cellular
systems already exist and will continue to exist. In general, with these systems,
some of the frequencies used in the AMPS systems are removed; and a CDMA base station
is positioned in place of a sector at a base station.
[0018] It is desirable to provide a process by which the quality of service provided by
a cellular system (and portions thereof) may be determined in terms of fixed verifiable
quantities so that changes may be made to enhance the quality of service with an expectation
that the changes will have the desired result in actually improving the quality of
service provided by the system.
Summary Of The Invention
[0019] The present invention is realized by a computer implemented process which compares
signals communicated between a known position and a plurality of base stations in
a cellular telephone system to determine the level of interference with a signal on
a channel expected to serve the known position, and determines a value indicating
a probability of interference with a signal on a channel expected to serve the known
position.
[0020] In one embodiment, changes in the system to improve the interference value are implemented
only if the interference value is above a certain level.
[0021] These and other features of the invention will be better understood by reference
to the detailed description which follows taken together with the drawings in which
like elements are referred to by like designations throughout the several views.
Brief Description Of The Drawings
[0022]
Figure 1 is a drawing depicting an idealized mobile cellular telecommunications system.
Figure 2 is a drawing depicting a portion of a more realistic mobile cellular telecommunications
system than that illustrated in Figure 1.
Figure 3 is a graphical view illustrating the effect of signals interfering with carrier
signals useful in understanding the method of the invention.
Figure 4 is a flow chart illustrating a portion of a process in accordance with the
present invention in a system such as that illustrated in Figure 1.
Figure 5 is flow chart illustrating another portion of a process in accordance with
the present invention in a system such as that illustrated in Figure 1
Detailed Description
[0023] Referring now to Figure 1, there is illustrated a cellular telephone system 10 which
includes a number of individual cells 12 arranged in an idealistic honeycomb pattern.
For the purpose of this explanation of the invention, the system 10 will be considered
to be an AMPS system. This invention may be practiced, however, with any of the known
cellular systems including CDMA and TDMA systems. More particularly, the signal strength
data accumulated in constructing a narrow band system such as an AMPS or TDMA system
may be used to construct or improve a CDMA or other wide band system. The data accumulated
from an AMPS system differs from that of a CDMA system only with respect to the effect
of Rayleigh fading; and the effect of Rayleigh fading cancels out with a sufficient
number of redundant points of measurement. In a similar manner, the data accumulated
from a CDMA system may be utilized to construct or improve an AMPS system.
[0024] In an AMPS system, each of the cells 12 includes at least one base station 13 which
transmits and receives communications on a number of assigned frequencies with mobile
units 15 operating within its service area. The frequencies which are chosen are separated
sufficiently that signals from any single base station do not interfere with other
signals from that base station. In Figure 1, the service area of each of the ideal
cells 12 is defined by an outer solid boundary which indicates the limits of the area
in which the signals from that cell 12 are strong enough to serve a mobile unit 15.
[0025] As may be seen in Figure 1, in order to allow mobile units to transmit and receive
telephone communications over a wide area, the service area of each cell 12 overlaps
the service areas of a number of adjacent cells 12 so that within these overlapping
areas either of two or more cells 12 might serve a mobile unit 15. The channels allotted
to the individual cells and the frequency reuse pattern are carefully selected so
that adjoining cells do not transmit or receive on the same frequencies. Consequently,
there are no overlapping areas over an entire cellular system in which signals of
the same frequency are received simultaneously from more than one cell 12 by a mobile
unit 15.
[0026] In some systems, cells used in areas carrying heavy traffic are further divided into
two or three sectors each of which may include channels allotted as described earlier.
The antennas of each three sector cell are arranged to provide 120 degree coverage.
With slightly over four hundred channels available to each cellular system, this allows
a repeating pattern of groups of cells in the beehive arrangement of Figure 1 with
seven cells each having three sectors each of which has approximately twenty channels.
[0027] Unfortunately, the boundaries at which the signal strength of a channel falls below
a level sufficient to support communications with a mobile unit vary widely from cell
to cell. For this reason, cells adjacent one another do not, in fact, typically form
the precise geometric boundaries suggested above but form a boundary patterns such
as those illustrated in Figure 2.
[0028] Since it is necessary that each cell 12 (or sector of a cell 12 if the cell is divided
into sectors) have sufficient power to transmit and receive signals with a mobile
unit 15 in the overlapping areas of cell coverage to accomplish hand-off of a mobile
unit transmission from one cell to another, it is possible that channels used by different
cells will interfere with each other. As has been pointed out, channels which may
interfere with one another are channels using the same frequency (co-channels) and
channels on frequencies immediately adjacent to a serving channel. Thus, in assigning
cell sites and establishing a reuse pattern, the operator attempts to assure that
channels which might interfere with one another are not present in overlapping areas.
This is relatively simple given the ideal system such as that illustrated in Figure
1.
[0029] However, in the more realistic system illustrated in Figure 2, it will be seen that
areas covered by different cells overlap not only where the cell sites are immediately
adjacent one another but at greater distances. For example, coverage provided by cell
4 (in Figure 2) is overlapped by coverage provided by each of adjoining cells 1, 2,
3, 5, 6, and 7. This overlap is normal and allows hand-off to occur when a mobile
unit moves from the area covered by cell 4 to any of the immediately adjoining areas
of coverage. However, coverage provided by cell 4 is also overlapped by non-adjoining
cell 8. If the cells of Figure 2 are divided into sectors each covering 120 degrees,
then the frequencies of channels assigned to the overlapping areas in adjoining cells
may cause adjacent channel interference. Moreover, because of the limited number of
channels available, the sectors of cell 8 may be assigned channels which cause co-channel
interference with the channels of cell 4 in a typical frequency reuse pattern. Similar
interference problems exists with respect to other cells in the cellular system which
are not shown in Figure 2.
[0030] Because the coverage offered by different cells differs so drastically, a cellular
system is usually established using software which predicts what signal strengths
are to be expected from each of a particular set of cells. This software uses input
data describing the general physical characteristics of the terrain surrounding each
cellular site and the physical characteristics of the cellular station to generate
estimated signal strength coverage plots for the area surrounding a cellular site.
This predictive software is used to determine antenna positions which should provide
optimum coverage with minimum interference in a typical system. However, since the
predictive software used to establish a system presumes general characteristics derived
from similar terrain and similar cells to determine cell coverage, overlap such as
the overlap of cell 8 into the boundaries of cell 4 illustrated in Figure 2 is often
not predicted. In fact, it has been found that the total prediction error in comparing
the strengths of the carrier signal and interference utilizing such prior art predictive
software is approximately plus or minus 13.6 dB. Since a carrier signal should be
18 dB greater than an interfering signal in order to eliminate co-channel interference
in an AMPS system, this is a very large discrepancy.
[0031] Once cell sites have been determined in some manner (e.g., using predictive software),
the operator assigns channel groups to the cells in accordance with the technique
described above, places antennas in position, and operates the system. Unless interference
is suspected or immediately apparent, the operator waits for subscriber complaints
to surface and then conducts physical tests at positions limited to the positions
of the complaints to determine whether interference, in fact, occurs at those positions.
The determination of actual interference is made by drive tests which measure signal
strength of channels at the positions where interference is suspected or complaints
have shown that interference has occurred within the cellular system area. Conducting
signal to interference measurements is very labor intensive, so strength measurements
are typically taken only at points where interference is expected. These tests may
entirely miss interference which actually occurs.
[0032] If the tests show that interference is sufficiently great at the positions of the
measurements, the groups of channels assigned to the cells having interfering channels
may be changed. Determining whether interference is sufficiently great is accomplished
by comparing at any point the level of interference to the signal level of the carrier.
Acceptable levels have typically been chosen to be those described above, i.e., 18dB
for co-channel interference and 6 dB for adjacent channel interference in an AMPS
system. If interference of this level is ultimately found to exist in an area which
is expected to carry significant traffic, the frequency group assigned to a cell (or
cells) is typically changed in its entirety to another frequency group which does
not have channels which would interfere with channels carried by the surrounding cells.
If this does not work, changing cell characteristics such as antenna tilt or the radiated
power may eliminate interference without changing the groups of channels used. Once
channels which provide acceptable coverage have been assigned to cells and the previously
detected interference has been presumed to be eliminated by this method, the system
is fixed and operated.
[0033] This operation is slow, labor intensive, and often does not provide a complete resolution
of the problem. For example, changing frequency assignments may simply transfer interference
problems unexpectedly to other areas of the system by transferring coverage such as
that shown for cell 8 in Figure 2 to unexpected areas.
[0034] A method has now been devised which overcomes the problems of the prior art by utilizing
measured signal level data for an entire system to provide predictive plots which
may be utilized to establish cell site positions and channel assignments. The process
allows plots and channel assignments to be easily changed at minimal cost whenever
a system undergoes change.
[0035] In one embodiment, the process begins with a drive test of the entire system area.
In the drive test for this embodiment, each cell and sector transmits on a single
channel different than any channel used for transmission by any other cell or sector
in the area. In general, signals on all channels transmitted from any one cell are,
on an average, received at the same strength at any given point in the service area
so long as the frequencies of the channels are within approximately ten percent of
each other. Thus, whatever channel a cell transmits on during the tests, the received
signal strength will be the same for signals transmitted on any other channel from
that cell.
[0036] If an entirely new system is being designed, expected cell sites may be selected
in any of a number of different ways such as by use of prior art predictive plotting
software; and then test transceivers may be placed at the proposed cell site positions.
If a cellular system already exists, then the cell sites which exist are used along
with any proposed new cell sites. A mobile unit with a scanning receiver drives over
all of the roads and highways of the entire system. The mobile scanning receiver constantly
scans and measures the strength (usually received signal power) of each test channel
transmitted from each of the cell sites as the mobile unit moves. The mobile unit
also includes equipment (such as Loran or Global Positioning System (GPS) equipment)
which constantly records the position of the mobile unit as each set of strength measurements
is taken. This provides strength measurements of frequencies generated by transmitters
at all of the cell sites proposed to be included in the system which can be received
at each point in the service area over which the mobile unit drives. By transmitting
from each cell on a single different channel, the cell which is transmitting any signal
received at any point by the mobile unit is positively known. As the test continues,
the signal strength measurements of all signals received (or all signals greater than
a certain level) are recorded in a database by equipment in the mobile unit together
with the position at which the signals were received .
[0037] It should be noted that certain interference, typically Rayleigh fading, is essentially
intermittent in nature. Such interference tends to strengthen and weaken received
signal strength over very short distances. In order to eliminate the effect of this
intermittent fading, readings may be taken at a number of positions quite close together
and later averaged in order to provide quite an accurate representation of the strength
of signals received at any point. In one embodiment, each data sample is combined
with other data samples within one hundred feet of each other to eliminate the intermittent
effects and normalize samples taken during different test drives. Since Rayleigh fading
is the primary difference between received signal strengths in different types of
mobile systems, the data gathered from tests conducted in narrow band systems may
be used in the design or improvement of wideband systems.
[0038] The frequency of each piece of signal strength data in the database is then related
to the test channel being transmitted by each cell and sector during the test. This
generates a database which indicates the cell and sector from which each signal received
by the mobile unit was sent. The cellular strength data base thus includes actual,
rather than projected, received signal strengths at each point in the test area for
signals transmitted from each cell.
[0039] It should be noted that the signal strength data for an area can be compiled from
more than a single drive test. In such a case, the data from all of the drive tests
must be combined so that the data of each drive test matches that of other drive tests.
Thus, for example, if higher transmission power was used in one drive test than in
another, then the strength values should be scaled to provide data having the same
significance. The data collected from one drive test may also be "combined" with previously
collected data from other drive tests if the new data represents only a portion of
the cells in the network. Of course, if data is already available from previous wide
area test drives, then this data may be used and no test drives need be conducted.
This step is useful when adding new cells to a network so that the effect of new cells
may be determined without having to re-collect data for the entire network.
[0040] A second method of collecting signal strength data provides substantial economies
over the method explained above, especially when new sites are being planned and a
particular site has not yet been selected. Tests have shown that the signal strength
received at a cell site from the mobile transmitter in an uplink transmission is on
an average the same as the signal strength which would be received at a mobile unit
from a cell site in a downlink transmission. If the uplink and downlink signal strengths
differ, comparable values may be obtained by adjusting the amplifications and power
values. Thus, rather than conducting drive tests with transmitters placed at each
proposed cell site as in the first method and checking each against the other, drive
tests are conducted by placing a single transmitter in a mobile unit and using fixed
receivers (rather than expensive scanning receivers) at all of the proposed positions
at each of the sites over an area for which new cells are proposed. The mobile unit
drives over the roads encompassed by the new cells transmitting on a single frequency
while all of the receivers attempt to detect the transmission. The power level transmitted
by the mobile antenna is measured at the mobile unit, and a positioning system is
linked to the mobile unit to provide position indications at each point of measurement.
The mobile transmitter sends a signal at the selected frequency, and the receivers
at all of the cells measure its strength. The position of the mobile unit for each
of the test transmissions is recorded with the times of the transmissions in a database.
The signal strength received at each proposed site and the times of reception are
recorded by each receiver. Since the signal strength received at a cell site from
the mobile transmitter in an uplink transmission is on an average the same as the
signal strength which would be received at a mobile unit from a cell site in a downlink
transmission (or may be adjusted to be so), the data gathered by the drive test using
this second method may be directly substituted for the data gathered in the drive
tests for the previous method.
[0041] Once the data is available, however it has been collected, the process compares the
data for each channel received at each point in the entire area with the data for
all other channels received at the point to determine at any point which cells should
serve the point. These cells are called "likely servers." A number of criteria may
be used.
[0042] In general, a cell is a likely server at a particular location if there is a non-trivial
probability that a cell will provide a transmission path to or "serve" a mobile unit
at that location. Different methods may be used to determine likely servers. A basic
method identifies as likely servers all cells that serve a location with a signal
strength within 3 dB (or some other value depending on the system) of the strongest
signal strength for that location. More sophisticated methods may account for signal
path imbalances, may balance the uplink and downlink strengths where they vary, may
bias certain strength determinations in favor of particular cells, or provide other
adjustments to match the particular area of the system. The method may also account
for each different type of network hardware and network configuration and control
information (e.g. how mobile unit hand-off is performed) to determine likely servers
for each location.
[0043] Using the basic method, the cell providing the strongest signal at a point is typically
designated the cell to serve that point because signals on any channel on which the
cell transmits will be received at approximately the same signal strength. Signals
on other channels received at the same point but at lesser strengths still within
the 3 dB. range typically are transmitted by adjoining cells in what constitutes a
hand-off (overlap) area for that point. The service area for each such cell is ultimately
determined by applying the planned power, path imbalance, and handoff parameters to
the test data which has been accumulated.
[0044] Once the cells serving all of the points of a service area are known, the group of
channel proposed for each of the cells or sectors is associated with those cells.
When the channels for each cell are known, the signal strength provided by each cell
which is the server at each test position in the cellular system is compared with
the signal strengths of all cells transmitting signals received at each test position
which transmits on channels which could cause co-channel or adjacent channel interference.
This allows a determination of whether the proposed channel selection causes either
co-channel or adjacent frequency interference at any point in the system. Since the
points at which signals on any particular channel transmitted by one cell will have
a certain strength and may interfere with signals from another cell may be determined
from the signal strength data which has been collected, such a determination may be
made for each proposed point and channel in the system. Whether a signal will interfere
is usually determined by subtracting the interfering signal strength in dBm from the
signal strength of the carrier signal serving the point in dBm at each point. The
cells which are likely servers at each point have already been determined from the
test to determine cells serving a point. For co-channel interference in the AMPS system,
if the difference is less than 18 dB, interference exists. For adjacent channel interference
in the AMPS system, if the difference is less than from 3 to 6 dB. (depending on the
criteria used), interference exists. If there is interference at any point in the
system, the pattern of channel assignments and other cell configuration information
(such as effective radiated power (ERP)) may be changed; and the actual signal strength
database may be run against the new cell channel assignments. This requires no new
testing or other operations by the operator; it requires simply running the software
until channel selections which exclude interference are determined.
[0045] Not only may the process be used to update or plan a new system, the process also
allows signal strength measurements derived from drive tests conducted using a particular
type of cellular system such as an AMPS to be used for determining coverage and interference
patterns for cell sites utilized by entirely different types of systems. This has
the advantage of allowing drive test results accumulated from an older system to be
used to predict interference which may occur in newer types of systems which might
be installed at the same sites. The same signal strength test results may be utilized
as a system is changed in any manner. In a similar manner, if an operator has already
established CDMA channels from which the strength of signals may be discerned, it
is possible to use this data to optimize the performance of the AMPS channels which
exist at the same cell site. An additional benefit is that the CDMA measurement process
is non-invasive so that the operator does not have to "key-up" channels for testing
to derive data.
[0046] In an AMPS system, the new channel assignments may be tested by the software against
the signal strength measurement database to derive new predictions of interference.
If additional cells or sectors are to be added, this may be accomplished by drive
tests for signals from the new cells only. These may be added to the signal strength
measurement database and the updated database used to determine new channels to be
used.
[0047] It has now been determined that this process may be made substantially more useful
by modifying the process to provide consistent values which indicate just how the
various points, sectors, and cells in the system, and the system itself compare with
other points, sectors, cells, and systems. Such a value is more readily understood
by system operators and allows changes to be planned with an understanding of the
result which will be accomplished by those changes.
[0048] In order to generate values which have meanings which remain consistent wherever
they are determined, the improved process relates not only the strengths of carrier
signals and signals which interfere with those carrier signals but also determines
the probability of occurrence of the various interfering signals and the severity
of the interference during receipt of the interfering signal. This allows an interference
value to be determined which essentially indicates the percentage of time a subscriber
to a mobile system may expect to encounter perceptible interference at any point in
the system. Moreover, the interference values for points within a sector, cell, and
system may be accumulated and averaged in the manner described in Figure 4 to provide
an interference value for sectors, cells, and the system. This allows an operator
to pinpoint sectors and cells which need to be improved and provides an overall evaluation
of a system from which an operator may determine rationally whether improvements need
to be made. Using the interference values for points in a system, the efficacy of
each change to the system may be evaluated as it is proposed. Each type of change
which might be made may be compared to other types of changes in order to make the
most economical changes possible.
[0049] To understand how a consistent interference value may be derived, the process of
interference has been dissected to determine its elements. For example, if it is possible
that three different signals may interfere with a particular signal from a base station
which is a most likely server, then the actual likelihood of each of these signals
interfering can be considered in order to better understand how receipt of signals
at that point compare with receipt of signals at other points and thus to have an
idea on how to improve a system. This is accomplished by the use of a probability
number assigned to each of the different interfering signals determined from the traffic
patterns and other factors known (or estimated) to occur for the particular base stations.
A cell in an area having more traffic transmits during a greater portion of the time
spectrum.
[0050] Figure 3 illustrates a plot of co-channel interference ratios (carrier strength of
signal from a primary server divided by signal strength of a co-channel signal received)
versus the effect those ratios have on transmission of a carrier signal in an AMPS
system. The effect is shown as a weight value which indicates the severity of the
interference. As may be seen, if the co-channel interference is great enough so that
the difference in signal strength is less than approximately 10 dB, then the interference
is too great for any useful transmission. Such an interference level is given a weight
of one. On the other hand, if the signal strength of a carrier signal is more than
18 dB greater than the signal strength of the interfering co-channel, then the effect
on the transmission is nil; and a weight of zero is given. Between these values, the
interfering signal has greater and lesser effects as may be seen from the figure.
[0051] In one embodiment of the invention, the presumption is made that if two or more signals
may possibly interfere with a carrier at any point in the system, the effect of the
stronger interfering signal will negate any effect that the weaker signals may have
during time the stronger signal is being received. Although this is an approximation,
its use has little affect on the accuracy of the results produced. The use of this
presumption means that only the stronger interfering signal need be considered at
any time. Thus, to determine the overall effect of three interfering signals, the
probability of the occurrence of each signal is determined and then multiplied by
the weight value to determine the effect that signal has. For example, a strongest
interfering signal within 10 dB of the carrier has the weight one (indicating that
the carrier signal is entirely obscured during transmission of the interfering signal)
multiplied by the probability of occurrence. Thus for the 2 dB signal shown in Figure
3, its probability is 0.4; and its effect is obtained by multiplying this probability
by the weight of one.
[0052] Once the effect of the strongest interfering signal has been determined, its probability
of transmission is subtracted from one to provide the probability that the first interfering
signal is not active. The result of this computation provides the time range within
which the second strongest interfering signal occurring will have significant effect.
Thus, the probability that the second strongest signal of 12 dB will interfere is
the probability factor 0.6 of the second signal occurring multiplied by the time during
which it will have significant influence (0.6 of the total time). This probability
for the second signal is multiplied by its weight of 0.84 to determine its effect.
The probability that the third signal of 15 dB will interfere is determined by multiplying
the probability that the first interfering signal is not active by the probability
that the second interfering signal is not active by the probability factor for the
third signal occurring. This probability factor is then multiplied by the weight of
0.32 for the third signal to reach an effect for the third signal.
[0053] Adding the effect of all of these signals interfering provides a final result of
0.7408 which may be stated as a percentage and provides a quality number for the particular
point in the system with the planned channels and parameter settings. In essence,
the interference value indicates the percentage of time interference will be present
at the point. Obviously, the value of 74% indicates that receipt of signals at the
particular point is almost impossible. This interference or quality value may be compared
with interference values for all other points in a service area.
[0054] Once a quality value for a point has been obtained, quality values are obtained for
some number of additional points in the sector sufficient to provide a relatively
good evaluation of all of the places in the sector at which communications may be
received. The quality values obtained for a sector are then added together and divided
by their number to obtain an average quality value for the sector (or cell). Figure
4 illustrates the method by which this is accomplished, finding first an interference
value for a point, then a next point, and so on until the points for a sector are
all determined. Then all sectors values are determined and finally a sector score
is reached.
[0055] Similarly, once the quality value for one sector has been obtained, quality values
for all sectors in a system may be similarly obtained, added together and averaged
to provide a quality score for the entire system. This score may then be utilized
to determine whether the system should be changed in order to provide improved service.
Utilizing a quality value which is consistently applied from point-to-point, sector-to-sector,
and system-to-system allows a valuation to be made from which some real determination
of quality may be made.
[0056] More specifically, if a quality valuation for a sector is known, it is possible to
determine whether changes which might be attempted in the system would be successful.
That is, different changes to a particular sector may be assigned different quality
increments by testing to determine the effect those changes might have. For example,
changing the power level of an interfering signals from another sector can clearly
be ascribed an increment since the level of signal received is an exact value in reaching
the original interference level. With an incremental value to be applied for a change
to the sector, it may be known before any change is made whether that change will
provide an improvement in the sector and system quality.
[0057] Figure 5 is a flow chart which illustrates the operation of the method to improve
the quality of a system once a quality value for the sectors and a system are found
and the values of possible changes are known. As may be seen, the method begins with
the original interference value for a point, and selects a best change to improve
the quality of service for the point. Often when beginning to improve a system, this
best change is a change in the group of frequencies assigned to one or more sectors
(or cells). Probably the next change to be made once appropriate frequency groups
have been chosen, is to change power settings of transmitters. Biasing the level of
handoff so that the handoff occurs if two channels are within two, three, or four
dB of one another in a handoff area changes the point at which handoff occurs and
the level of power necessary in those areas. Other changes which are possible include
changing antenna types, and other changes related to equipment modification.
[0058] The method illustrated in Figure 5 may be used in more than one manner. It may be
used to iterate through changes of one type (e.g., change the frequency assignments)
computing each result as it is implemented in software until an interference value
is reached which is the best that that form of change can accomplish. Alternatively,
it may be used to select among different types of changes to determine which provides
a better result when compared to the cost of implementing the change.
[0059] Presuming for the moment that the change is an iteration through a selection of possibilities
of one type (frequency groups) until a best result is reached, a list of changes is
prepared by comparing the interference levels at each point to determine which frequencies
interfere with one another. A particular change is selected from the list of possible
changes, and a determination is made by running the software whether the change produces
a result greater than some value so that the change is worth undertaking for the improvement
to be expected. When testing different frequency groups, the change making the process
worth while may be a reduction of some percent (e.g., one percent) in the interference
value. Changing frequency groups, changing power levels, or biasing the handoff level
differently usually costs nothing but processing time and is worth while if it produces
a concrete result. Other changes may require new equipment and be more expensive,
however.
[0060] If the change contemplated does not produce an improvement sufficient to warrant
its use, the change may be thrown out and a final interference value determined. If
the change is worth making, the list of changes is updated to show that the particular
change has been evaluated and the amount of change is listed in a list of changes.
The change is added to a list of changes to make as a best change if it is the first
or best tested. It is also listed as the best change to make. The process then iterates
through the list and for each change above the minimum change which is worth while,
updates the list of possible changes by removing the tested changes from the list
of those changes still to be tested, recording the change value, adding the change
to the optimization steps if its effect is greater than preceding changes, and replacing
the best change with the latest change if the result is correct. Ultimately, the best
change to be made for the particular point is reached. A similar process occurs for
all other points in the system. Ultimately, a result for changing the particular factor
that produces the best result for each sector and the system is reached.
[0061] The method may then proceed with any other changes which might implemented to improve
the system. The same iterative method may be used to determine a best change of the
particular type for each point, sector, cell, and the system.
[0062] Alternatively, different types of changes may be given different weightings and the
entire process carried out for each point with respect to all of the possible changes
to determine which changes should be implemented to produce the best results.
[0063] Although the present invention has been described in terms of a preferred embodiment,
it will be appreciated that various modifications and alterations might be made by
those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
The invention should therefore be measured in terms of the claims which follow.
1. A computer implemented process comprising the steps of:
comparing signals communicated between a known position and a plurality of base stations
in a cellular telephone system to determine the level of interference with a signal
on a channel expected to serve the known position, and
determining a value indicating a probability of interference at the known position.
2. A computer implemented process as claimed in Claim 1 in which the step of determining
a value indicating a probability of interference at the known position includes the
steps of:
combining for each signal being received at the known position a probability of receipt
of such signal and a weighting indicating the severity of interference to be expected
from such signal at the known position to determine an effect for such signal, and
combining the effects for all signals being received at the known position to determine
the value indicating a probability of interference at the known position.
3. A computer implemented process as claimed in Claim 2 in which the step of combining
the effects for all signals being received at the known position includes the effect
of only a strongest interfering signal during any interval.
4. A computer implemented process as claimed in Claim 1 comprising the additional step
of averaging values indicating a probability of interference at known positions within
a communication area served by one of the base stations to determine a value indicating
a probability of interference within the communication area served by the base station.
5. A computer implemented process as claimed in Claim 3 comprising the additional step
of averaging values indicating a probability of interference at known positions within
a communication area served by one of the base stations to determine a value indicating
a probability of interference within the communication area served by the base station.
6. A computer implemented process as claimed in Claim 4 comprising the additional step
of averaging values indicating a probability of interference within the communication
areas served by the plurality of base stations to determine a value indicating a probability
of interference within the communication area served by the cellular telephone system.
7. A computer implemented process as claimed in Claim 5 comprising the additional step
of averaging values indicating a probability of interference within the communication
areas served by the plurality of base stations to determine a value indicating a probability
of interference within the communication area served by the cellular telephone system.
8. A computer implemented process as claimed in Claim 1 in which the signals are determined
from actual field tests.
9. A computer implemented process as claimed in Claim 8 in which the signals are determined
from actual field tests of cellular systems establishing channels on a basis different
than the basis of the cellular telephone system.
10. A computer implemented process comprising the steps of:
combining values indicating strength of signals communicated between each of a plurality
of closely adjacent known positions and a plurality of base stations in a cellular
telephone system to determine average strengths of signals communicated between an
average known position and the plurality of base stations,
comparing the average stength of signals communicated between an average known position
and a plurality of base stations in a cellular telephone system to determine the level
of interference with a signal on a channel expected to serve the average known position,
and
determining a value indicating a probability of interference at the average known
position.
11. A computer implemented process as claimed in Claim 10 including the further steps
of:
selecting a projected change to implement which affects strength of a signal between
the known position and the plurality of base stations, and
determining the improvement in the value indicating a probability of interference
at the average known position by implementing the projected change.
12. A computer implemented process as claimed in Claim 11 including the further steps
of:
selecting additonal projected changes to implement which affect strength of a signal
between the known position and the plurality of base stations, and
determining the improvement in the value indicating a probability of interference
at the average known position by implementing the projected change until the improvement
is less than a predetermined value.
13. A computer implemented process as claimed in Claim 10 in which the values indicating
strength of signals are values determined from actual field tests.
14. A computer implemented process as claimed in Claim 13 in which the values indicating
strength of signals are values determined from actual field tests of cellular systems
establishing channels on a basis different than the basis of the cellular telephone
system.
15. A computer implemented process comprising the steps of:
collecting data indicating the actual strengths of all signals to be transmitted between
a plurality of cells each positioned at an individual physical position in a mobile
communications system and a mobile unit at a plurality of points defining an entire
mobile communications system,
comparing actual strengths of all signals serving a point from each of the plurality
of cells with all other signals received by a mobile unit at each point of the system
to detect signals other than desired signals which rise to established levels of interference
for the particular system,
determining a value which measures a level of interference at each point in the system,
utilizing the values to determine values which measure the level of interference for
each cell and the system,
determining whether any value which measures the level of interference for each cell
is sufficient to warrant reducing interference in the cell, and
selecting corrections in cell characteristics which reduce signal strength of interfering
signals until interference has been reduced below a predetermined interference level
throughout the system.